The Syrian Electronic Army has hacked Vice.com and deleted the article titled “Is This the Leader of the Syrian Electronic Army?” They’ve also altered the website so that visitors of vice.com/en_us would be redirected to sea.sy, the hacktivists’ website.

“Your website was hacked by the Syrian Electronic Army. This time we just deleted the article that you claimed in it that you exposed “Th3Pro” identity. But you didn’t. You published names of innocent people instead,” the hackers wrote in an article published on Vice.com.

The hackers threatened Vice in late August 2013. They claim to have gained access to Vice’s systems two days after the article about the identities of alleged members had been published. However, they say they’ve postponed the attack until now because at the time, Vice was aware of the fact that they might be targeted.

The hacker group posted a screen shot of the administration panel of Vice’s presumed content management system (CMS) to its Twitter account.

SEA, a group of hackers that supports Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, claims it gained access to the Vice website by breaching a number of email accounts, including that of one of the website developers, according to Softpedia as well as a series of tweets posted to the SEA Twitter account.

eHacking News reports that SEA “also claimed to have hacked into the mailchimp account and managed to send mail to 33,000 subscribers.” Mailchimp is a service used to manage email marketing lists.

Following Vice’s publication of the August article on its Motherboard site, SEA denied its accuracy.

Vice’s website appears to have since been restored to normal. As of this writing, Vice had not made any statement on its website or at its Twitter account regarding the incident.

You can read more about the Syrian Electronic Army at Legal Insurrection here.